That is the answer, although you can simply further.Would it be (18(4t^4)^2) *(-16t^3)+(-40(6t))(6)?
You've successfully found the rate of change of F as t change. Not sure what you mean by "where would the x(t) and y(t) go?"?I only see one t so where would the x(t) and y(t) go?
Yay!!! Thank you SO much for all your help! If only I had your brain ?That is the answer, although you can simply further.
You've successfully found the rate of change of F as t change. Not sure what you mean by "where would the x(t) and y(t) go?"?
Remove the red negative sign and place power of \(\displaystyle 4\), then your answer will be correct.Okay so what wohld the answer would look like then? I only see one t so where would the x(t) and y(t) go?
dF/dt=(18x^2)*(-16t^3)+(-40y^4)(6)
Would it be (18(4t^4)^2) *(-16t^3)+(-40(6t)^4)(6)?
Correct. The goal is to put everything in terms of t, hence the meaning of the notation [imath]\frac{dF}{\red{dt}}[/imath], i.e. how is F changed as t changes?
But it's x(t)...and y(t) so I would want to plug in those equations for t?